Fiddling around with labour costs and pension founds was great american sport.
Meanwhile fuel is at more than 75$ a barrel. And that is for all the industry the same.
Unlike labour contracts, oil prices can't be tossed aside by a bankruptcy judge.
To tank up a B747-400 for a longhaul flight it costs about $101,000.
Some airlines look like Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines*, throwing over board everything they really don't need to fly: some airlines pulled out ovens and anything else they could to take weight off the planes.
Saving on sanitary water and even on paint.
I suspect some airline marketing offices mulling fares for passngers that fly light: special fare for passengers without luggage. (Passengers without catering we knew already...)
Fuel is now the airline industry's greatest cost, topping labour, putting the balance more level with foreign competitors.
Once that gets level, real competion can start. I'm looking fwd what the outcome will be.
On the other hand, the more aircraft America sells to China and the Far East, the quicker it will kill its own airline companies**... The classic branch they sit on. Let me guess? In six years Yankee Doodle Dandy will fly on a chinese carrier from SFO to BOS?
And still on an other hand, the cargo fleets are aging*** on which pilots fly under extreme pressure in all weather there was one fatal crash per month on average since 2000.... 69 fatal crashes since 2000 have taken 85 lives. Is the US waiting a huge "cargo" disaster?
*Plot Outline: Sabotage efforts damage an international air race.
**As Billie Holiday sung:
Yankee doodle never went to town
I just discovered the story was phony
Let me give you all the real low-down
He didn’t even own a pony
***Many fly planes have mechanical problems, which is unthinkable in passenger flights. In US, cargo pilots can fly 40% more hours per year; they are not required to have eight hours' rest 24 hours prior to a flight, as are passenger pilots. As U.S. air cargo deaths mount, the industry remains under the radar